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  1. When the Flesh is Word Debt Economy is Not a Thing for Heaven.Lisa Isherwood - 2015 - Feminist Theology 23 (3):284-291.
    This paper examines how a radical incarnational starting point would change the way we view the economic order. It highlights the way in which the current system creates extreme poverty and suffering for the many and asks if this can be tolerated by Christians. It also examines the Christian underpinnings of such a system and suggests that other Christian roots would lead to alternate and more inclusive systems.
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  • Dancing in the Dark: Marcella Althaus-Reid and Negative Queer Theory.Kristien Justaert - 2018 - Feminist Theology 26 (3):229-240.
    In this article, I confront Marcella Althaus-Reid’s thinking with the recent ‘negative turn’ in queer theory, as observed by Judith Halberstam. What remains when the belief in our world as such, and in the future of it, has to be totally rejected, as some queer theorists like Leo Bersani and Lee Edelman, for example, claim? Or, in theological terms: what could the categories of redemption, salvation and liberation still mean if one wishes to think God within history, but at the (...)
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  • The Possibilities and Limits of Queer Strategies of Denaturalizing and Resignifying Gendered Symbolics.Wendy Mallette - 2018 - Feminist Theology 26 (3):267-285.
    In this article, I take up Marcella Althaus-Reid’s queer strategy that pairs disaffiliation with intimate identification in order to draw out the possibilities and limits of queer strategies of resignification and denaturalization. I will use David M. Halperin’s work on gay femininity, abjection, and camp as the primary site to investigate these queer strategies. This article’s considerations have implications for recent directions taken in contemporary queer theology by challenging projects that presume a certain limitless capacity for queering or that seek (...)
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